The Standard (St. Catharines)

Iran resolved as some U.S. sanctions resume

- NASSER KARIMI

TEHRAN, IRAN — Iranian President Hassan Rouhani struck a hard line Monday as the U.S. restored some sanctions that had been lifted under the 2015 nuclear deal, demanding compensati­on for decades of American “interventi­on” in the Islamic Republic.

While saying he had “no preconditi­ons” for talks, Rouhani in a live television interview maintained that Iran can rely on China and Russia to help its oil and banking sectors as the U.S. ramps up sanctions in the coming months.

The U.S. resumed sanctions targeting Iran’s automotive sector as well as gold and other key metals on Monday.

“If someone has knife in the hand and seeks talks, he should first put the knife in his pocket,” Rouhani said.

A first set of U.S. sanctions that had been eased by the Obama administra­tion under the landmark nuclear deal took effect again on Monday, following U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision in May to withdraw from the accord. Renewed sanctions targeting Iran’s oil industry and banking sector will resume on Nov. 4.

Rouhani fell back on the rhetoric of many of his predecesso­rs by referencin­g the 1953 CIA-backed coup that overthrew Iran’s elected prime minister and cemented the shah’s rule.

“I have no preconditi­ons” for negotiatin­g “if the U.S. government is ready to negotiate about paying compensati­on to the Iranian nation from 1953 until now,” Rouhani said. “The U.S owes the Iranian nation for its interventi­on in Iran.”

Trump repeatedly has tweeted that he is willing to talk directly to Iranian officials without preconditi­ons.

But the Iranians, who negotiated with the U.S. for more than two years in order to reach the nuclear accord, say it has betrayed their trust by reneging on its commitment­s. Rouhani held a brief phone call with president Barack Obama in 2013 as the talks were getting underway, the first time presidents of the two countries had spoken directly since the 1979 Islamic Revolution.

The uncertaint­y caused by the reimpositi­on of American sanctions has proven devastatin­g for the Iranian economy, already weakened by decades of sanctions. Iran’s rial now trades over double its government-set rate to the U.S. dollar. Sporadic protests have broken out across the country, something that Rouhani again blamed Monday on the U.S.

“The Americans thought that they can add to our social and economic problems through increasing pressure,” he said.

Iran’s central bank has lifted a ban on exchange offices, allowing them to resume work in a move aimed at bringing in badly needed hard currencies.

The bank also gave the green light for Iranian “legal institutio­ns and businesses” to bring gold and foreign currency into Iran, according to the governor, Abdolnasse­r Hemmati.

Hemmati told state TV late Sunday that “money exchangers are allowed to sell and buy foreign currencies” once again, to improve access to “services and travel abroad.”

The official exchange rate will remain at 42,000 rials to the dollar for vital imports such as medicine and food, he added.

The decision goes into effect Tuesday. Hemmati said the central bank will try “not to intervene in deciding on the price” of foreign currencies.

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